Friday 14 February 2014

All That You Are Seeking...

“It is said that all that you are seeking is also seeking you, that if you lie still, sit still, it will find you.  It has been waiting for you a long time.  Once it is here, don’t move away.  Rest.  See what happens next.” ~ Clarissa Pinkerton-Estes, Women Who Run With the Wolves

Happy Valentine’s Day!  I decided my gift to you all is a handful of excerpts from my books – both those already published and those to be published this year – on a theme in keeping with this day.  The theme is:  the way you never know, as you walk through your ordinary day, when someone out of the ordinary will appear…and change your life  -  for better or worse.      
***
This first one is from my novella about a woman who leaves civilization to go live in a ghost town…and, despite her reclusive needs, she begins to wish for at least an imaginary lover…

Excerpt from HUNGER IN THE FIRST PERSON SINGULAR: Stories of Desire and Power (Amador Publishers 1992)

from Chapter 3: The Tea Maker
I have seen him.  Oh god, this was not how I expected it to be.  I had so much more I wanted to write here before he entered.  And he is not – somehow he is not my fantasy.  I haven’t had time to conjure him, to work on the details.  I wasn’t sure if I wanted him to be stocky and blond or gaunt and dark – I wanted to create him.  Damn, I wanted to invent him myself!  And here he is.        
As for stalking, how ludicrous!  Not turning a corner to find him, loin cloth, poised to pounce.  Instead I find him standing in t-shirt and jeans making a pot of tea at the Ranford cabin wood stove!
The Ranford cabin is at the other end of Main Street, with the Ranford name carved on a panel of the front door.  I went there this afternoon because I remembered seeing a piece of screen on the back porch which I needed to patch a window.  I knelt to pry the screen from between two boards and, as I stood, something dark blue, almost invisible in the deep grey interior of the cabin, moved slowly inside the kitchen.  I stepped to the door quietly, peered in, and saw him.  Or his back, at least, bending to pour boiling tea water into a pot.
The strange part is I somehow knew, immediately, that this was no ordinary hiker with a backpack for me to scavenge.  There have been no signs of his arrival or presence, and he is suddenly here.  But, more than that, he pulled my attention in a different way than the hikers did – something similar to those times back in the real world when I would walk into a room full of people and sense one particular person’s presence, in peripheral view, before really looking at them – a recognition at subterranean levels.  This was similar, except the context was not a room full of people but the silence and stillness of my ghost town.  He drew my attention so fully that I forgot to be afraid he’d see me, and it is this that has me so disturbed.
Not only does this visitor puzzle me, but the details are odd – like the look of the teapot.  Not a camper’s tin, but cream colored, with tiny red flowers clustered on the front, and a chip in the handle.  And what about the wood stove fueled up and burning?  I didn’t see chimney smoke when I walked toward the cabin, nor smell it when I was on the back step.  Yet there he was, bending to pour steaming tea. 
He didn’t seem to see or hear me, which is peculiar.  It’s so silent here, the slightest noise is heavy on your eardrums, and we were standing only about six feet apart.  He should have at least sensed a change in the airflow from the doorway or felt my shadow cross his light.  But he didn’t turn, just continued his task. I heard the sound of water pouring, saw the steam rising.  I pulled back quickly, off the porch, around the cabin, ran back here, and bolted the door.  Not the brave, stalking landlady…  

***

The next excerpt is a bit of a scene which takes place in a New Mexico truck stop on Route 66. Two people are trying to travel solo down that infamous highway, but something about their past lives in Mesoamerica seems to want to interfere with their plans…

Excerpt from JOURNEY FROM THE KEEP OF BONES (Amador Publishers 2003)




From Chapter 28: The Mother Road

He had imagined being on the road would feel free, no rules to obey, no restrictions.  Apparently he was wrong.  There was a whole other hierarchy out here.  He was no better than a fast-food, French-fry boy with a master’s degree in philosophy, his first day on the job.  He would have to apprentice at this hitchhiking business, swallow his pride, work his way up to pro level.  He should have picked up a paperback about this; surely there was some sort of “Hiker’s Rules of the Road”.  He’d read Kerouac’s On the Road, of course, but that was written almost forty years ago.  Maybe Route 66 wasn’t even Steinbeck’s Mother Road or the Road of Flight anymore.  Hell, The Grapes of Wrath came out in ’39.  Looked like it was too late for him to do this trip.  Wrong generation, almost sixty years too late.
          He began to feel depressed again.  That same old sinking, strangling feeling he thought he’d left fifty miles back, rolled up in the used sheets and towels of his Albuquerque motel room.

          Three booths away in the same truck stop outside Laguna, Adrianne – oblivious to the curious stares drawn by her shaven head – was drinking her first cup of Route 66 coffee in one of those classic, cream-colored mugs that was almost too heavy to hoist.  She’d made it out of Ojo de Sombras before the snow began to whiten the sides of the road.  It had been rainy from there.  She drove down to Bernalillo and then picked up I-25 to I-40, heading for Grants.  Despite the late hour, she felt she could drive until dawn.
          She unfolded her map and was tracing the route to her first motel stop with her finger when the blinking Christmas lights went out.  She looked up, startled, thinking the electricity was out, but the overhead lights, coffee machines and heating vents were still energetically glaring, perking and blowing.  Amused, she watched the truckers trying to impress the waitress, upsetting chairs and shoving tables aside as they followed the green, plastic Chinese ropes to the wall sockets, twisting and jiggling the light lines to no avail.
          Adrianne started to tell the waitress that if you made sure all the bulbs were twisted in tight, the lights would probably come back on, but thought better of it.  She didn’t want to get involved in the sexual banter, which had elevated markedly during this electrical event. Instead, she curled one leg underneath her in the booth, sipped her coffee and unobtrusively sketched one of the truckers as he jiggled the lights, the waitress as she wrote out a ticket, a lanky man in a bomber jacket sitting three booths away.  The expression on his face was interesting.  He seemed to be judging the conversations around him, staring out the window with a soft smirk.  Yet his eyes seemed sad.  No, angry.  No…she couldn’t quite describe his expression in words, so she sketched instead.
          Something about him bugged her.  As she shaded in the set of his eyelids, he began to seem familiar to her, but from another context.  He was out of place here.
          She sipped her coffee and closed her sketchbook, then opened it from the first page and leafed through it, each sketch bringing back a memory.  A couple pages of Red Rock Mesa.  One she had tried from memory of the Pueblo grandpa’s face in the rearview mirror.  Sam, black, taking a sun bath; Sam, white, sleeping in the moonlight.  The Maxine-jaguar-fish dream.  A nude of Laura sleeping, the crow feather she’d left behind.  The trees across Rio de Sombras, a jack-o-lantern.  A page of animal shadows, a detailed drawing of the jaguar knife.  The view from the Watermelon of the man straddling the 66 Center window ledge--
          Adrianne’s head jerked up and she shot a look at the man in the bomber jacket.  A rush of fear washed through her and, as it receded, she sat staring at him, puzzled at her reaction.  Fear?  Why fear?
       Because it was damned strange, him being here.  The one she’d painted, the cocoon-woman portrait.  The window man, the one she kept missing at the Center that night.  She felt a strong inclination to jump up and leave as quickly as possible, hoping he wouldn’t notice her.  But why should he notice her?  She had seen him that day, he probably hadn’t seen her at all.  Well, briefly, when she went into that black-&-white studio.  But he probably wouldn’t remember that.
         Adrianne exhaled slowly.  She forced herself to avert her eyes and take a deliberate sip of her coffee, as if nothing was wrong.  She tried to pin down exactly what was wrong.         
          Two sips later she had it figured out.  She was upset because one very big point of heading out on Route 66 had been to be anonymous.  To observe and not be observed.  To slip down the road, in and out of the truck stops and motels, as if invisible  To watch, listen, sketch and keep moving.  To see who drew her attention, male or female, and why.
          But how could she, if every damned nightmare she ever had was going to keep showing up, sitting there drinking from truck-stop mugs, interrupting her solitude – pulling and tugging her backwards into dreams already dreamed, people already come and gone from her life?  She had hoped the cycle of dream portraits was at an end, that by staying mobile for a while and traveling alone, the dreams would just stop and she could move on to painting simple things—mountains, old abandoned trucks along the Painted Desert, maybe even the ocean if she got that far.
Adrianne shot an accusing glance in the window man’s direction.  But he was gone.  His seat was empty, his cup being whisked away by the waitress.  Adrianne looked around the truck stop and outside the window.  He was definitely gone…
Back in her car, Adrianne wiped the rain from her scalp with Laura’s old muffler and rubbed her gloved hands together.  While she waited for the defroster to kick in and melt down the window fog, she surveyed the interior of her traveling home with a thrill of pleasure…her camping gear, overnight bag, and a healthy supply of t-shirts, socks and sweaters.  Spread across the back seat were a pillow, sleeping bag, wicker trunk of art supplies and a small cooler filled with fruit and sandwich things.  Neatly arranged on the floor on the passenger’s side were a coffee thermos, water bottle, bag of pretzels, emergency flashlight and box of cassettes.  Her maps were tucked into the driver door pocket, her mink-and-Navajo-blanket medicine bag occupied the passenger seat, and on the dashboard were the requisite “I Fished the Rio de Sombras!” commuter mug and a combination plastic Guadalupe Virgin statue/compass.  Hanging from the rearview were Laura’s crow feather, a sprig of sage and the tiny violet feather from her sleepwalking night, all tied together with a strand of old rosary beads.
The window was clear and she pulled out of the truck-stop lights onto the half-lit access road, flipping on her windshield wipers.  There, up ahead at the bottom of the ramp, a dark figure wearing a backpack stood with his thumb out.  As she drew closer to the intersection, Adrianne saw the bomber jacket and haggard-yet-hopeful face of the 66 Center window man…

***

From my family book…Holly has been told not to talk to strangers…but sometimes it’s hard to obey that rule…

Excerpt from THE GREEN DOGS OF LONELY WOODS (Green Phoenix Productions to be published Autumn 2014)

          When she got to the edge of the woods where her fort had been,  Holly stood a long time staring into the darker part where she had seen—or imagined—the tree puppy yesterday.  Maybe she should put her new fort in there, away from the fly tippers.  That way when the grown ups had a litter pick they might leave it alone.  She could make a better fort this time, using more tree branches and even a roof woven with branches and reeds.  If it was disguised to look more like part of the woods, then the grown ups wouldn’t even see it. 
          Holly found the spot where she had buried the box.  She began poking at the ground with her new sword, then knelt to scoop up the dirt.  She was sure this was the spot, it had been the third tree to the left of her old fort.  But dig as she might, the box was gone. 
          “Very strange,” she said to herself.  She had not told anyone where it was, and had been alone when she buried it.
          “Is this what you’re looking for?” a strange, scratchy voice suddenly spoke.  Holly whirled around but no one was there.  She knelt back on the ground, very still, her eyes darting all around. 
          “H...hello?” she whispered, not sure why she was whispering.
“Over here,” the voice said, now laughing—a rusty kind of laugh.  Holly turned toward the sound but still could see nothing but trees and long grass and wildflowers.  Then a movement in the grass, a flash of purple and tin.  And, above, just like yesterday, Max hanging from a tree branch.  She started to leap up and rush toward her prizes but stopped herself.  After her tangle yesterday with the tree puppy, she was not going to fall for that again!
          “Oh come on, I was just saving them for you,” said the voice.  It was an odd gravelly voice with a squeak to it like tree branches rubbing each other in a wind storm.  It was hard to tell if it was a man or woman but it was definitely an old voice.  Holly squinted and peered into the green but still could not see anyone.  Just Max and her treasure box.  Slowly she stood and crept over to them.  Before she could reach for them, the green grass and tree limbs seemed to quiver, and the box and Max seemed to float toward her.
          That was when she realised they were being handed to her, by hands.  Green hands with twiggy knuckles and mossy thumbs, but hands nevertheless!  Shaking now, Holly
took the box and Max, stepped back and started to run away.   
          But now a face began to emerge from the green and brown tangle of the woods.  And that’s when she first saw Manny Greenkeeper, although of course she didn’t know his name yet.
            Basically he was green.  His skin, the irises of his eyes, even his teeth were various shades of green.  His nose was long and craggy and very like a bit of carroty root with a knob on the end.  His hair hung in scraggly clumps like moss and seaweed, with leafy sideburns, and his ears were rather large like flattened green peppers.  He was the skinniest creature Holly had ever seen, and at least 7 feet tall.  The most noticeable thing was the way he smelled—like mushrooms and spores and wild garlic. 
          There he sat,  creaking as he moved to arrange himself, his leafy skin making the sound of autumn rustling, his joints cracking like twigs underfoot.  It seemed he had trailed the vines and debris from the ground and gathered it like a cape, draped across his lap.  Holly let her gaze follow the greenery back into the darker part of the woods from where he must have crept when she wasn’t looking.  It was as if he was a spider and the green threads of the woods were his web, attached to his body.  He laughed again, leaned back on his elbows, and nodded at Max in her arms.
       “I know he is important to you, but why?  When there are so many real doggies who need a girl like you to take care of them?”
          “I, uh, I...my mother won’t let me have a real dog,” was all Holly could think to say, staring at the green creature and wondering how it was possible for her to be talking with him in the middle of a Sunday  afternoon, as if this was the most normal thing in the world.  Her mother had always said “Don’t talk to strangers” after all, and this was about as strange as you could get!  But Holly was beginning to realize nothing about these woods was exactly normal, so she might as well go along with the game, whatever it was.  Oddly, she didn’t feel afraid, just very curious…

***

Excerpt from GUARDIAN OF THE DARK SCHOOL (Green Phoenix Productions to be published Spring 2014)

From CHAPTER 5: Emerging Poets
          Fiona hung up the phone and sat in the darkness, feeling the warmth of the dinner wine.  She mused over the perplexing events of the evening -- not daring to try to give much thought to the strange sexual events of the afternoon.  Those she would save for later, back in her casita. 
          Her conversation with her father had been brief.  It was late on his end, and he was just about to turn in after a day of gardening and mowing.  They didn’t have the conversation she envisioned earlier, the one in which she would tell him how much she regretted having come to New Mexico, and how she would probably be going back to Baltimore by the week's end.
          Instead, after dinner, she called and babbled to him about the beautiful New Mexico sunset outside the stained glass window of this room.  She was quietly pleased when, asking to use the hacienda phone, she was directed toward, and left at the threshold of the chess library.   Talle was entirely courteous, even warm, telling Fiona to use this phone because it would afford her the most privacy of all the other phones in the house.  It appeared that her hostess didn’t suspect her of having left leaves in the hall or spilling wine on her journal after all.  While dialing her father's number, Fiona was able to inspect the chess board in the soft glow of the green library lamps.  The dust patterns exactly matched the Green Man's instructions.  The white rook to f6, the black knight to b5.  She quietly and quickly replaced the pieces, amazed at her good fortune; no one had discovered her accident before she could correct it. 
          Fiona chatted with her father from a place of wine and relief, describing in great detail the beautiful mansion, her casita, the bookstore.  Leaving out the disconcerting fax from her professor, the local mythology of the missing poet, the scene at the hot springs, all of her doubts and forebodings.  She told him she would be honored at a poetry reading in two weeks and he said, sleepily, "That's great, sugar plum, I know you'll knock 'em dead."  She promised to call next week, to keep him posted on her great adventure.
          She found it amazing that the Green Man was right about the chess pieces.  Or her subconscious was.  Perhaps here, away from the city, she was more able to tune in to her intuitive, instinctual self.  Fiona felt her emotions had turned around, and she wanted to stay the full two months.  She wanted nothing to do with the restrictive, competitive atmosphere of the Baltimore Fine Arts Institute’s creative writing department, and did not long for the dark cave of her basement apartment.  She would indeed write while here.  The first poem was bubbling and brewing, she felt ready to burn the midnight pinon logs, to get back to her Green Man poems.  She would write about him from the sensuality of these woods and mountains, from the eroticism of her experience and dream this afternoon.  Very different than that dry, intellectual place she’d worked from at the Institute.  Fiona stared up at the resin replica.  There he was, grinning slyly at her again, as he had last night, and today in her dream.  She rose and crept over the luxurious rose-colored Persian rug, to get a better look at the Bomberg replica.
          "Did you reach your party?"
          Fiona gasped, startled, and turned around to see Liam Fagan in the doorway.  It was still hard to believe -- as it had been through dinner -- that this was the same man she had seen spilling his seed in the valley this afternoon.  For one thing, in the indoor light of the hacienda,   Fagan -- in his late fifties -- was very pale, not the nudist brown she distinctly witnessed earlier.   His hair was the same -- long and white, now tied severely at the nape of his neck with a black cord.  He had the same face and eyes, but his body -- albeit hidden in the loose folds of 1940's-style, wide trousers, a non-descript white shirt, and an over-sized cardigan which looked like an Irish knit to her -- seemed thin and ethereal, not muscled as it had been in the raw.  His eyes were distant, a pale blue-grey, and his cheekbones were very lean.  The effect was of a man staring right through you into another dimension, not really seeing you or connecting.  His hands, picking up  silverware at the table earlier, were delicate and long-fingered, fascinating to watch, but seeming to barely make contact with objects -- as if feathers lightly dusting over the surface.  Somehow she knew that his skin, to the touch, would be very cold.  Yet, outside on the sunlit rock, it would have been fevered and damp.
          "Pardon?"
          "Your call, did you have success?"
"Oh, yes.  I was calling my father.  Thank you for letting me use the phone...this is an exquisite room."
          Liam Fagan moved into the room, pausing at the chess board.  He frowned, lightly touching the two replaced pieces.  Fiona froze.
          "Odd.  These had fallen.  I needed to check my computer to see where to replace them.  But someone has, already."
          He looked up at Fiona, expectantly.
          "Really?"
          He looked back at the pieces, his fingers still hovering over  the horse head of the knight, the castle's turrets.
          "They are replaced exactly right, now that I see it.  Sometimes, you know, you have to visually see a thing to discern its pattern.  It's not enough to remember it in your mind's eye.  At least, at my age it is so."
          "I know what you mean," Fiona breathed quickly.  "I was admiring your Green Man," she added, hoping to distract his attention.
          "Was it you who replaced the pieces?"
          Fiona froze again, stopping in mid-gesture as she faced the Green Man on the wall, her back to Liam Fagan.  She made a quick choice and turned to face her benefactor.
          "Yes, it was me.  I apologize.  Last night I was lost and wandered in here.  I knocked them over in the dark, by accident.  I felt I had disturbed something quite sacred."
          "Sacred.  Interesting word choice.  But you are one of the poets, after all.  I’m curious -- why did you wait until tonight to replace them?"
          Fiona looked down at the exotic floral carpet.  Again, she made a choice about how to interact with this strange man of an obviously dual nature.
          "I had a dream.  The Green Man told me how to replace them.  I checked the dust pattern.  He was right."
          Liam looked up from the chess board and stared into her eyes.  At first, it seemed as if he stared through her, as he had all during dinner.  But now they were focused, intently, and an icy heat radiated from them that was probing, shrewd, kindly, alarmed and, to her surprise, erotic. 
          It was her body that registered that final implication, a heat starting up her lower spine.  At the same time, her pulse increased and her breathing shortened.  It took Fiona several seconds -- which felt like several minutes -- to begin to feel able to receive this disturbing gaze without embarrassment or discomfort.  However, just as she began to relax into it, with curiosity and pleasure, their gaze was broken -- with apparent reluctance on Liam Fagan's part, for he grimaced at the interruption -- by Talle's form filling the library doorway. 
          Fagan's wife had apparently been in the hallway long enough to hear Fiona's confession.  She looked from Liam to Fiona and gave a warm, practiced smile -- which struck Fiona at that moment as a "professional" smile -- and spoke, in muted, cultured tones, as if noting the name of a pattern on an antique porcelain tea cup.
          "That's interesting.  Apparently you were not the only one to have a mishap in the night.  This morning I found someone spilled wine on my book..."
          Fiona looked Talle in the eyes, still warmed and aroused by the gaze with Liam that had been interrupted.  "Coitus interruptus" came to mind, and she smothered the urge to giggle.
          "...Or was that you, also?"
          Fiona made her third choice of the evening.
          "No, I only spilled the chess pieces."
          "Probably the sidhe, dear," Fagan smiled at his wife.  "You know how such things happen all the time, here."
          Talle smiled at him in return, herself initiating a long gaze.  He responded with a cool, detached smile.  The woman then rested her gaze on Fiona, considering the young poet.  Fiona surprised herself at how easily she sustained the eye contact, how steady and calm she felt doing so.  And how, at some level, she realized she didn't care whether or not Talle believed her. 
          It wasn't that she disliked the woman; it was that, for some reason Fiona did not yet grasp, she had decided to proceed with honesty with Liam and dishonesty with Talle.  Her reward for that honesty with Liam had been a look shared between them, like rich and potent sherry.  It was a secret, a knot of decadent chocolate slipped into her palm by a stranger, a knot she wanted to take back to her casita and examine.  She knew that honesty with Talle, at this moment, would dissolve that chocolate, and something precious would be lost, forever. 
          It struck Fiona that she felt exactly as if Talle had walked in on Liam and Fiona naked across the chess board.  Fiona now finally blushed thoroughly, recalling Professor Bregman's faxed message.  She looked at Liam.  He was staring straight at her, a small and knowing smile on his lips…  





Illustration at THE GREEN DOGS OF LONELY WOODS by Chris Bell (c) 2014.  May not be used without author's permission.

More information on these books and how to order them may be found at: http://www.greenphoenixproductions.org

No comments:

Post a Comment